Abstract

Noncommunicable diseases are the main cause of death globally, and most are potentially preventable; they are long term diseases and generally evolve slowly. In Uruguay 64.9% of the population between 25 and 64 years of age are either overweight or obese. The available scientific data show that workplaces are good for developing food-intake interventions for a healthier life. The present study aims to report the design, protocol and methodology for the evaluation of the food intake and physical activity patterns of the Uruguayan State Electrical Company (UTE) workers, as it is distributed across the whole country, and has established associations with overweight and obesity in order to establish institutional strategies to improve the situation. This study uses a population and a cross-sectional, randomized, representative sample of UTE workers with a precision of 3% and a confidence level of 95%. The considered anthropometric variables are weight, height, waist circumference, percentage of fat mass and percentage of visceral fat. A questionnaire on frequency of consumption of different foods and two 24-h dietary recalls (24-h DR) will be performed to evaluate the food intake. Accelerometry will be used to evaluate physical activity, and the International physical activity questionnaire (IPAQ) will be applied. Clinical data will be obtained from the UTE clinical charts. This is the first study of its kind that will be undertaken in Uruguay. It is registered under ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier nº NCT04509908.

Highlights

  • The present study aims to report the design, protocol and methodology for the evaluation of the food intake and physical activity patterns of Uruguayan State Electrical Company (UTE) workers and their associations with overweight and obesity in order to establish institutional strategies to improve the situation

  • This is a transversal observational study addressed to workers who started working between 1 January 2010 and 31 December 2017 at the UTE

  • The strong innovative points of the design, protocol and methodology used in this study are:

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Summary

Introduction

Noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) represent one of the major challenges of the 21st century for health and development. They represent the main cause of death globally. Forty-one million annual deaths are due to NCDs, 71% of deaths in the world. 15 million people die prematurely before 70 years of age. Most of these deaths are potentially preventable; the diseases last a long time and generally evolve slowly. The four main kinds of NCD are cardiovascular diseases (CVD) (heart attacks and strokes), cancer, chronic respiratory diseases (chronic obstructive pulmonary disease) and diabetes [1]

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